A Comparative Study between p and Mobile WiMAX-based V2I Communication Networks

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1 A Comparative Study between 82.11p and Mobile WiMAX-based V2I Communication Networks Ikbal Chammakhi Msadaa, Pasquale Cataldi and Fethi Filali EURECOM, Mobile Communications Department 694 Sophia-Antipolis, France {msadaa, QU Wireless Innovations Center Doha, Qatar Abstract Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) have been under development since the 8 s as part of a global strategy for solving many of our modern life transportation problems. These systems enable people to reach their destinations in a safe, efficient, and comfortable way. In order to reach that goal, several radio access technologies (RAT) such as UMTS, WiFi, WiMAX and 5.9 GHz have been proposed for next generation ITS. Yet, the coexistence of these technologies in the vehicles raises the challenge of choosing the most appropriate RAT. In order to address this problem and define optimal rules for the communication technology selection, comparisons on the network performance have to be done. In this paper, we compare two of the most promising infrastructure-based wireless technologies: mobile WiMAX (based on IEEE 82.16e standard) and the 5.9 GHz technology based on the upcoming IEEE 82.11p standard. We investigate, through simulation, the potential and limitations of both technologies as a communication media for vehicle-to-infrastructure (V2I) communications. The performance of the two systems is evaluated for different vehicle speeds, traffic data rates, and network deployments. Keywords: ITS, IEEE 82.11p, 5.9 GHz technology, IEEE 82.16e, mobile WiMAX, V2I, simulation. I. INTRODUCTION During the last two decades, several initiatives, like COMe- Safety [4], and technical groups supported by standardization bodies, such as the IEEE 82.11p task group [1], the ISO TC24 Working Group 16 [2] and the ETSI ITS Technical Committee [3] have been created to solve many of our society transportation problems. From that perspective, three main categories of applications have been targeted: (i) road safety applications, (ii) traffic efficiency applications, and (iii) valueadded applications. Road safety applications: the primary goal of this set of applications is to reduce road fatalities by assisting and warning the driver about the potential risks. This category covers applications like pre-crash sensing and collision risk warning. Traffic efficiency applications: this category is intended to relieve traffic congestion by helping to monitor the traffic flow and by providing alternative itineraries to drivers. These applications make the transportation systems not only more efficient but also more environmen- TABLE I ITS APPLICATIONS CATEGORIES: EXAMPLES AND REQUIREMENTS. Application Latency Range Example category tolerance (delay requirements) Road Low Local Pre-crash sensing/warning (5 ms) safety latency range Collision risk warning (1 ms) Traffic Some latency Medium Traffic information - efficiency is acceptable range Recommended itinerary (5 ms) Value-added Long latency Medium Map download update - Point of services is accepted range interest notification (5 ms) tally friendly by optimizing routes and decreasing gas emissions. Value-added applications: they include on-demand services related to infotainment, comfort or vehicle management. They can be provided either free of charge or for a fee - which could help to finance the deployment of such networks. Also, by notifying a point of interest (e.g. parking lot, restaurant, etc.), some of these applications may help to save time and thus to reduce fuel consumption. In Table I we can see that the groups of services presented above have different requirements, in terms range, delay, and throughput. Indeed, they cover a wide range of applications that vary from locally sending a small and urgent message (e.g., in order to alert a driver about an imminent crash) to updating a map on the on-board device by downloading a big file from a remote server. Considering the conflicting requirements of the applications, several ITS architectures have been proposed by vehicular communications initiatives and standardization bodies. In particular, most of them agree on the necessity of having a variety of communication media. The two architectures, presented in Figures 1(a) and 1(b), are proposed by the European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI) [4], and ISO TC24 Working Group 16 [2], respectively. The possibility of having different communication technologies for vehicular communication yields to the necessity to understand which is the most suitable in every specific context. Indeed, since in the near future vehicles will be equipped with different access technologies, knowing the capabilities

2 and limitations of these technologies, and knowing their availability are very important factors to make radio access technology (RAT) selection and decide whether a vertical handover should be performed to achieve an always best connected communication. Recently, standardization bodies have given mandate to technical groups to define the application requirements for ITS applications. Moreover, business models will be developed to include the cost and benefit for the user of using a certain technology with respect to another. The last piece needed is the performance analysis of the different access technologies. Among the communication technologies, in this paper we propose to compare two of the most promising ones: mobile WiMAX (based on IEEE 82.16e standard [6]) and the 5.9 GHz technology based on the upcoming IEEE 82.11p standard. IEEE 82.11p-based technology [1] has been developed for the specific context of vehicular networks. In particular, it is expected to be particularly suitable for medium range and delay-sensitive road safety applications. Mobile WiMAX, on the other hand, offers a promising alternative because of its potential to offer medium to long range connectivity, full support of mobility, and high data rates with moderate delay. Based on these characteristics, the two technologies seems intrinsically complementary in terms of range, data rates and delay. Nonetheless, to the best of our knowledge, this is the first time that the performance of the two technologies are compared through simulation. Our objective is to study the feasibility of both technologies as communication media for vehicular networks by evaluating their performances in the same simulation environment. The remainder of this paper is structured as follows. Section II presents the related work. Section III provides an overview of both IEEE 82.16e and IEEE 82.11p standards. It summarizes the main characteristics of each access technology and compares them based on several criteria. In Section IV, we first define our simulation environment and settings and then analyze the results of the performance evaluation study we have performed. Section V concludes the paper by outlining the main obtained results and providing future work directions. II. RELATED WORK IEEE 82.11p [1] is a draft amendment of whose standardization process has not been finalized yet. Meanwhile, some works have been published to introduce this upcoming standard. For example, Jiang et al. [7] have described the history of the standardization process of 82.11p, presented its spectrum band and channels, and detailed its main amendments at both MAC and physical layer. Other works have focused on the integration of an 82.11p simulation model into a simulation environment such as NS2 [8] or NCTUns [9]. Nevertheless, most of the papers were interested in evaluating the 82.11p communication protocol and potentially enhancing it. The performance studies performed in [1] and [11] have focused on the evaluation of the Enhanced Distributed Channel Access (EDCA) QoS extension supported by the 82.11p protocol. Eichler [1] has shown, by simulation and analytical means, that the use of highly prioritized messages could lead to a significant increase of the collision probability especially in dense V2V communication scenarios. To tackle this problem, he has suggested the use of a re-evaluation method proposed in a previous work whose objective is to reduce the number of high priority messages and prevent long message queues. Wang et al. [11] have shown that fixing the size of the backoff window in EDCA could decrease the throughput in V2I communication scenarios. Therefore, they have proposed two approaches (a centralized and a distributed one) to adapt the size of the backoff window to the number of communicating vehicles. Stibor et al. [12] have studied the number of potential communicating neighbor nodes, and the maximum communication duration in a multi-hop vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) context. Their simulation results could be used to optimize the planning of multi-hop communication routes on a highway in order to efficiently forward emergency messages in a V2V communication scenario. As for mobile WiMAX technology, only a few works have attempted to study its feasibility as an access media for vehicular networks. To compare WiFi and WiMAX as infrastructures for V2I communications, some measurements have been carried out by Chou et al. [13]. The preliminary results of these measurements show that, at distances under 1 m, WiFi performs better than WiMAX in terms of throughput and delay. An architecture has been proposed by Aguado et al. [14] for mobile WiMAX deployment in V2I scenarios. In the first part of the paper, the authors have detailed the proposed architecture based on a set of requirements, then evaluated its performance through simulation. The carried simulations have revealed that the inter-asn (Access Service Networks) handover may lead to significant delays in some circumstances. Yet, they have shown that the proposed WiMAX system fulfills the requirements of demanding real-time applications such as VoIP and video conferencing which place mobile WiMAX as a competitive solution in V2I context. Given the specifics of the two technologies and their expected performance, it is still fundamental to compare them in the same scenario by using realistic simulation tools. The lack of works in this field between these two technologies has motivated our work. A. IEEE 82.11p III. IEEE 82.11P VS. IEEE 82.16E IEEE 82.11p is an ongoing amendment [1] that is aimed at standardizing a set of extensions for in order to adapt it to the V2X (V2I and V2V) environment. From that perspective, many phases of the basic communication protocol at MAC layer have been eliminated or shortened. Indeed, unlike 82.11, 82.11p allows stations to communicate in OCB mode i.e. outside the context of a basic service set (BSS), thus avoiding the latency caused by the association phase. Moreover, there is no need to scan the channel since the OCB communication occurs in a frequency

3 (a) ETSI Architecture [4]. (b) ISO CALM Architecture [2]. Fig. 1. ITS station reference architectures. Fig. 2. European channel allocation [18]. band dedicated to ITS use 1. Also, when exchanging frames in OCB mode, the MAC layer authentication services are not used. Yet, it is still possible to have secured communications provided by applications outside the MAC layer. At physical layer, the amendment concerns mainly the spectrum allocation. Vehicular communications are performed in the 5 GHz range, where one channel is dedicated to control and the others to ITS services. Figure 2 illustrates in particular the European profile for the channel allocation. According to this profile, the control channel (G5CC) is used for road safety and traffic efficiency applications. It may also be used to announce ITS services operated on the service channels (G5SC1 to G5SC5). The service channels G5SC1 and G5SC2 are used for ITS road safety and traffic efficiency applications while the others (G5SC3, G5SC4 and G5SC5) are dedicated to other ITS user applications. In order to reduce the effects of Doppler spread, the use of 1 MHz channels has been adopted instead of the usual 2 MHz used by 82.11a. Consequently, all OFDM timing parameters are doubled (e.g. the guard interval, the OFDM symbol duration, etc.) and the data rates are halved (vary from 3 to 27 Mbps instead of 6 to 54 Mbps). Moreover, the European profile requires that ITS stations are able to simultaneously receive on both the control and one service channel. Therefore, two transceivers are needed. In this work, we considered the standard profile of the physical and MAC layers recently proposed by ETSI [18].. 1 A license might be needed for these bands, depending on the regulatory domain. B. IEEE 82.16e The IEEE Std defines the air interface for fixed BWA systems in the frequency ranges 1-66 GHz - where line-of-sight (LOS) is required - and sub 11 GHz - where non-los (NLOS) is possible. The IEEE 82.16e-25 amendment updates and expands IEEE Std to support subscriber stations moving at vehicular speeds and thereby specifies a system for combined fixed and mobile broadband wireless access. In this paper, we consider the two-way PMP mode where Mobile Stations (MSs) communicate with each other only through a central base station (BS) which receives and coordinates all their transmissions. The standard offers the possibility of adapting the modulation and coding schemes (MCSs) based on the channel conditions and proposes a set of techniques such as packing and fragmentation to allow efficient use of the available bandwidth. The MAC layer defined by the standard is connectionoriented. Each connection is associated to an admitted or active service flow (SF) whose characteristics provide the QoS requirements to apply for the protocol data units (PDUs) exchanged on that connection. Uplink flows are associated, in addition to a scheduling service, to one of these request/grant scheduling types: unsolicited grant service (UGS), real-time polling service (rtps), extended real-time polling service (ertps), non-real-time polling service (nrtps), and best effort (BE). Each scheduling service is designed to meet the QoS requirements of a specific applications category. In addition to all the features already supported by the fixed WiMAX standard, the 25 amendment introduces a set of enhancements, namely in support of handover and security, in order to adapt the existing 24 version of the standard to a mobile environment. Table II summarizes the characteristics of both technologies based on several criteria. IV. PERFORMANCE EVALUATION A. Simulation environment and settings For our simulations, we have used the network simulator QualNet 4.5 [15] which is the commercialized version of GloMoSim. The Advanced Wireless Library proposed by QualNet integrates a simulation model for mobile WiMAX with the support of several features such as PHY OFDMA, PMP and TDD modes, AMC capability, QoS scheduling services, etc. Nevertheless, the simulator does not include an 82.11p model. Therefore, we have first implemented the necessary changes (as reported in Section III-A) to existing 82.11a PHY and 82.11e MAC models in order to adapt them to 82.11p specifications. Note that we have adapted the power of the transmitter and the minimum sensitivity of the receiver to what has been specified in [18]. To evaluate and compare the performance of both mobile WiMAX and 82.11p technologies in V2I context we have considered a highway scenario. Our study is divided in three parts. During the first part we measure the connectivity of

4 TABLE II 82.11P VS 82.16E 82.11p 82.16e Standardization Draft [1] Standard [6] Frequency/ GHz 1-66 GHz licensed License free but licensed below 11 GHz: (2.3, 2.5, License by rule 3.5, 5.8, etc.) both licensed and license-exempt Channel 1 MHz Depends on the Phy profile bandwidth (3.5, 5, 7.5, 1 MHz, etc.) QoS support 4 classes of QoS 5 classes of QoS: UGS, (EDCA extension) ertps, rtps, nrtps, BE. AC VO, AC VI, AC BK, AC BE Security No Authentication prior data encapsulation protocol support to data exchange with a set of cryptographic Instead, each packet is used suites and PKM protocol for authentication by certificate to synchronize keying data based digital signatures between BSs and MSs Media access CSMA/CA TDMA, technique No scanning, no association FDD or TDD Usage Network dedicated to Could be used by vehicles (ITS stations) residences, companies, personal devices,... Other supported Support of AMC, ARQ, features AAS, STC and MIMO the two technologies in order to determine the radio range between a vehicle and a 82.11p road side unit (RSU), or a WiMAX base station (BS). In the second part, we compare the communication performance of the two technologies on a highway segment which length corresponds to the coverage of one BS varying the speed of the vehicle. After analyzing the performance of WiMAX, the performance of 82.11p is investigated by replacing the single BS with the number of RSUs necessary to cover the same segment. Finally, in the third part, we observed the impact of the traffic datarate on the throughput and the delay. In order to determine the range of the 82.11p RSUs and of the WiMAX base station, we have set our simulation parameters as reported in Table III. The path loss fading model has been set to a two-ray Ricean fading model with a high line-of-sight component which is quite realistic in the highway context (unlike in an urban environment, where this assumption is not valid). For the evaluation of the range of an 82.11p RSU, we simulated the transmission of periodic beacons (using the control channel at 5.9 GHz for 82.11p communication). Accordingly to the ETSI specifications, the basic beaconing rate is set to 1 Hz and the periodic message (also called CAM, i.e. cooperative awareness message) is 55 bytes long and contains geo-information. The scenario is illustrated in Figure 3(a). In Figures 3(c) and 3(d), we can observe the delivery ratio as a function of the vehicle distance from the RSU or the BS. Considering a packet delivery ratio greater than 9%, the cell radius coverage of 82.11p and WiMAX are then around 9 meters and 6.5 Km, respectively. Based on these results, we have set three different network deployments for all the simulation scenarios to be considered. Packet Delivery Ratio TABLE III SIMULATION PARAMETERS 82.11p 82.16e Frequency 5.87 GHz (G5SC3) 3.5 GHz Channel bandwidth 1 MHz 1 MHz RSU Tx power 23 dbm (=2 mw) 33 dbm (=2 W) RSU antenna height 2.4 m 32 m RSU antenna gain 3 dbi 15 dbi MS Tx power 23 dbm (=2 mw) 23 dbm (=2 mw) MS antenna height 1.5 m 1.5 m MS antenna gain dbi -1 dbi Type of antenna Omnidirectional Pathloss Two-ray Fading model Ricean (a) 82.11p coverage scenario. 12 kmph 9 kmph Distance of the Vehicle from the RSU (m) (c) 82.11p coverage results. Fig. 3. Packet Delivery Ratio (b) WiMAX coverage scenario. 12 kmph 9 kmph Distance of the Vehicle from the BS (km) (d) WiMAX coverage results. Coverage evaluation scenarios. The first deployment corresponds to the case of a highway of 13 km fully covered by one WiMAX base station. The second deployment consists in fully covering the same road link by the equivalent number of 82.11p RSUs (as shown in Figure 4(a)). Finally, in order to observe the effect of handover on mobile WiMAX performance too, we have considered a third deployment that considers the area covered by two WiMAX BSs. In all the scenarios, we have considered a source of traffic that is connected to the RSUs/BSs through Ethernet links of 1 Mbps (to avoid any bottleneck outside the considered WiMAX/82.11p V2I networks). In the case of 82.11p scenarios, we simulated the transmission of the data over the G5SC3 channel, which is dedicated to non-safety applications. The effect of increasing the number of vehicles is not considered in this paper. In fact, even with only one vehicle, by increasing the source data rate, we can analyze the upper limits that can be reached in mobile WiMAX and 82.11p V2I networks in similar conditions. In order to have realistic movement of the vehicle on the highway, the mobility traces have been generated with SUMO.9.8 [16]. In particular, in order to adapt the mobility traces generated by SUMO to QualNet, we have used MOVE

5 needs of most emergency applications. However, at very low data rate (e.g. 25 kbps) 82.11p performs better than 82.16e which is convenient for exchanging small and delay-sensitive safety messages. (a) Deployment with several RSUs. (b) Deployment with 2 WiMAX BSs. Average Throughput [Mbps] p RTS_Thresh 82.11p RTS_Thresh e 1BS 82.16e 2BSs Average Delay [ms] p RTS_Thresh 82.11p RTS_Thresh e 1BS 82.16e 2BSs Fig. 4. Scenarios network deployments. (MObility model generator for VEhicular networks) tool [17]. B. Performance analysis Using the simulation parameters detailed in Section IV-A, we have considered two scenarios. 1) Scenario 1: Study of the impact of the source data rate on 82.11p/82.16e V2I networks performance: In this first scenario, we have set the average speed of the vehicle to 1 kmph, that is a realistic value of vehicles on the highway. We have varied the data rate of a CBR traffic transmitted from the source to the vehicle considering the three configurations of deployed networks. This scenario covers network traffic loads varying from 25 kbps to 2 Mbps. We have evaluated the impact of varying the source data rate on both the throughput (shown in Figure 5(a)) and the end-to-end delay (illustrated in Figure 5(b)). In the case of 82.11p, we investigated the impact of using RTS/CTS on the transmission performance. In fact, the ETSI standard [18] allows the use of this mechanism for unicast transmissions whose packet size exceeds the dot11rt ST hreshold. Thus, giving that the packet size is set to 512 bytes, we considered two cases; first the dot11rt ST hreshold is set to and then to 1 bytes, which is the default value recommended by ETSI. All the results presented in this Section are the values averaged over more than 3 runs within a 95%-confidence interval. The obtained results allow us to derive the maximum throughput that could be reached in optimal (1 vehicle) yet realistic conditions (of speed, power, fading, etc). For IEEE 82.11p, the maximum throughput is around 1.2 Mbps while it could exceed 12 and 13 Mbps in 2 BSs and 1 BS deployment scenarios, respectively. As for the average end-to-end (E2E) delay, 82.11p experiences short delays (less than 4 ms) in low traffic conditions. However, when the source data rate exceeds the maximum that could be reached in 82.11p networks (around 1.2 Mbps), the delay significantly increases, exceeding 2 ms. When using RTS/CTS mechanism the delay further increases. The same behavior (increase of the E2E delay) is observed for WiMAX when the maximum sustainable data rate is reached, though at much lower scale since the average delay does not exceed 6 ms which fulfills even the Source Data Rate [Mbps] (a) Impact of the source data rate on the average throughput. Fig Source Data Rate [Mbps] (b) Impact of the source data rate on the average end-to-end delay. Impact of the source data rate on the average performance 2) Scenario 2: Study of the impact of the vehicle speed on 82.11p/82.16e V2I networks performance: In this second scenario, we have set the source data rate to 1 Mbps, a value that is slightly below the limit of 1.2 Mbps that we observed in the previous scenario, but that should maintain a good throughput. We have observed the impact of varying the vehicle speed on the average throughput (plotted in Figure 6(a)) and the end-to-end delay (shown in Figure 6(b)). For 82.11p, when the vehicle speed increases, the connectivity time to the 82.11p RSUs decreases which then reduces the amount of data received by the vehicle. Additionally, a fraction of time of this period is required to switch from one RSU to another. On the other hand, in the case of two WiMAX BSs, the handover execution requires a non-negligible time which affects the average throughput that remains lower than that of the scenario with a single BS regardless of the vehicle speed. The average E2E delays of 82.11p and 82.16e are plotted in Figure 6(b)). Remind that in this scenario, the source data rate is set to 1 Mbps, so there is no packet loss due to buffer overflow at the IP or MAC layers. For this reason, the end-toend delay is the same with one and two WiMAX base stations while in case of 82.11p, the delay slightly increases with the vehicle speed. One important observation that could be derived from this figure is that for both technologies, the E2E delay is lower than 15 ms (less than 1 ms for 82.11p) which fulfills the minimum requirement of most ITS safety applications. As final remark, the use of RTS/CTS mechanism slightly increases the E2E delay and affects the throughput. Nevertheless, the impact of this mechanism should be further investigated in heavy loaded vehicular traffic scenarios where it could prevent collisions and increase the packet delivery ratio but also entail longer delays. V. CONCLUSION In this paper, we studied the potential and limitations of both mobile WiMAX and 82.11p as communication media for vehicle-to-infrastructure (V2I) communications. We first compared the two technologies based on different criteria.

6 Average Throughput [Mbps] p RTS_Thresh 82.11p RTS_Thresh e 1BS 82.16e 2BSs Vehicle speed [kmph] (a) Impact of the vehicle speed on the throughput Fig. 6. Average Delay [ms] p RTS_Thresh 82.11p RTS_Thresh e 1BS 82.16e 2BSs Vehicle speed [kmph] (b) Impact of the vehicle speed on the end-to-end delay Impact of the vehicle speed on the average performance Therefore, we investigated their performance through simulation. The coverage, average throughput, and end-to-end delay were evaluated for different vehicle speeds, traffic data rates, and network deployments. The simulation results reveal on one side the great competitiveness of mobile WiMAX technology in the context of V2I communications. In particular, this technology, offers, not only a large radio coverage and high data rates, but also reasonable and even very low delays. On the other side, the 82.11p technology is better suited to low traffic loads, where it offers very short latencies even at high vehicle speed. The obtained results can be considered as a first step for the definition of an efficient common radio resource management (CRRM) module for vehicular networks. They could further be used as pre-defined criteria for radio access technology (RAT) selection for ITS applications. Future work will focus on extending this study to the urban environment. A broad analysis of the performance of the two technologies will be used to develop new algorithms for smart selection of the optimal RAT based on the applications requirements, the channel load, and the user s preferences. [8] B. S. Gukhool and S. Cherkaoui. IEEE 82.11p modeling in NS-2. In Proc. of the 33rd IEEE Conference on Local Computer Networks, 28. LCN 28, pages , Oct. 28. [9] S. Wang and C. Lin. NCTUns 5.: A Network Simulator for IEEE 82.11(p) and 169 Wireless Vehicular Network Researches. In Proc. of the IEEE 68th Vehicular Technology Conference, 28. VTC 28-Fall, pages 1 2, Sept. 28. [1] S. Eichler. Performance Evaluation of the IEEE 82.11p WAVE Communication Standard. In Proc. of the 1st IEEE International Symposium on Wireless Vehicular Communications (WiVeC), Sept. 27. [11] Y. Wang, A. Ahmed, B. Krishnamachari, and K. Psounis. IEEE 82.11p Performance Evaluation and Protocol Enhancement. In Proc. of the 28 IEEE International Conference on Vehicular Electronics and Safety, pages , Sept. 28. [12] L. Stibor, Y. Zang, and H. Reumerman. Neighborhood evaluation of vehicular ad-hoc network using IEEE 82.11p. In Proc. of the 13th European Wireless Conference, April 27. [13] C. Chou, C. Li, W. Chien, and K. Lan. A Feasibility Study on Vehicleto-Infrastructure Communication: WiFi vs. WiMAX. In Proc. of the Tenth International Conference on Mobile Data Management: Systems, Services and Middleware, 29. MDM 9, pages , May 29. [14] M. Aguado, J. Matias, E. Jacob, and M. Berbineau. The WiMAX ASN Network in the V2I Scenario. In Proc. of the 68th IEEE Vehicular Technology Conference, 28. VTC 28-Fall., pages 1 5, 28. [15] Scalable Network Technologies. Qualnet 4.5, March networks.com/products/qualnet/. [16] Centre for Applied Informatics (ZAIK) and the Institute of Transport Research at the German Aerospace Centre. Simulation of Urban MObility (SUMO).9.8, Feb [17] F. K. Karnadi, Z. H. Mo, and K. Lan. Rapid Generation of Realistic Mobility Models for VANET. In Proc. of the IEEE Wireless Communications and Networking Conference, 27. WCNC 27. March [18] ETSI ES V1.1.. Intelligent Transport Systems (ITS); European profile standard for the physical and medium access control layer of Intelligent Transport Systems operating in the 5 GHz frequency band. 21. REFERENCES [1] IEEE P82.11p TM /D7.. IEEE Draft Standard for Information Technology Telecommunications and information exchange between systems Local and metropolitan area networks Specific requirements, Part 11: WirelessLAN Medium Access Control (MAC) and Physical Layer (PHY) specifications, Amendment 7: Wireless Access in Vehicular Environments. May 29. [2] ISO TC24 Working Group 16. Continuous Air interface for Long and Medium range (CALM), Sept [3] [4] R. Bossom et al. D31 European ITS Communication Architecture - Overall Framework - Proof of Concept Implementation, March 29. COMeSafety deliverable. [5] CAR 2 CAR Communication Consortium. CAR 2 CAR Communication Consortium Manifesto: Overview of the C2C CC System, Version 1.1, Aug. 27. [6] IEEE Std 82.16e 25. IEEE Standard for Local and metropolitan area networks Part 16: Air Interface for Fixed and Mobile BWA Systems-Amendment 2: Physical and Medium Access Control Layers for Combined Fixed and Mobile Operation in Licensed Bands and Corrigendum [7] D. Jiang and L. Delgrossi. IEEE 82.11p: Towards an International Standard for Wireless Access in Vehicular Environments. In Proc. of the IEEE Vehicular Technology Conference, 28. VTC Spring 28, pages , 28.

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